Sans Superellipse Arnop 1 is a very light, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: ui design, app headers, tech branding, product labels, posters, futuristic, technical, minimal, clean, sleek, digital clarity, geometric identity, modern branding, interface cohesion, monoline, rounded, geometric, modular, open forms.
A monoline geometric sans built from rounded-rectangle and superellipse-like curves, with consistently softened corners and largely uniform stroke weight. The letterforms emphasize squared counters and flat terminals, creating a modular, constructed feel while staying smooth rather than sharp. Proportions run wide with generous internal space; curves are often drawn as squarish bowls (notably in O/C/D/G shapes), and diagonals appear in a few key glyphs (A, K, V/W, X, Y) to maintain clarity. The overall rhythm is even and airy, with simple, uncluttered joins and clear separation between strokes in text.
Well suited to interface typography, dashboards, and digital product surfaces where a clean, futuristic voice is desired. It also works effectively for tech-oriented branding, packaging, and headline use in posters or editorial layouts that benefit from a distinctive rounded-rect geometry. In longer text, it performs best when ample spacing and size support its wide proportions and stylized forms.
The tone reads contemporary and technology-leaning, with a calm, engineered precision. Rounded corners keep it approachable, but the squared geometry and streamlined detailing push it toward a sci‑fi/UI aesthetic rather than a humanist one.
The design appears intended to deliver a modern, system-like sans with a superellipse construction: friendly corners, high consistency, and a modular feel that reads as digital and forward-looking. Its simplified terminals and squared bowls suggest an emphasis on visual uniformity and clear geometric identity across letters and numerals.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent geometric logic, producing a cohesive texture in mixed-case settings. Numerals follow the same rounded-rect construction, giving interfaces and data-heavy layouts a unified visual system. The distinctive, boxy curvature can become a strong stylistic signature at larger sizes.